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From the Factory to the Metropolis (eBook)

Essays, Volume 2

(Autor)

eBook Download: EPUB
2018
John Wiley & Sons (Verlag)
978-1-5095-0349-0 (ISBN)

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From the Factory to the Metropolis - Antonio Negri
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This second volume of a new three-part series of Antonio Negri's work is focussed on the consequences of the rapid process of deindustrialisation that has occurred across the West in recent years.
In this volume Negri investigates exactly what happens when the class subjects of industrial capitalism are demobilised and the factories close. Evidently capital continues to make profit, but how and where? According to Negri, the creation of value extends beyond the factory walls to embrace the whole of society; the 'mass worker' of industrialism gives way to the 'socialised worker' (operaio sociale) and the terrain of exploitation now becomes the whole of human life. In postmodernity, the metropolis becomes the privileged arena of value extraction. We must therefore understand the global city, with its stratifications, its enclosures and its resistances. Old categories of the private and the public are inadequate to describe the new matrix of production, which is characterised rather by the 'common', the productive space of cognitive and immaterial labour. Today's metropolis can be defined as a space of antagonisms between forms of life produced, on the one hand, by finance capital (the capital that operates around rents), and on the other by the 'cognitive proletariat'. The central question is then how 'the common' of the latter can be mobilised for the destruction of capitalism.
In an analysis that runs from the Italian workerism (operaismo) of the 1970s to the present day, From the Factory to the Metropolis offers readers valuable insight into the far-reaching impact of deindustrialisation, presenting both the challenges and opportunities. It will appeal to the many interested in the continuing development of Negri's project and to anyone interested in radical politics today.



Antonio Negri is formerly Professor of State Theory at the University of Padua.

Ed Emery is a translator and political activist.


This second volume of a new three-part series of Antonio Negri's work is focussed on the consequences of the rapid process of deindustrialisation that has occurred across the West in recent years.In this volume Negri investigates exactly what happens when the class subjects of industrial capitalism are demobilised and the factories close. Evidently capital continues to make profit, but how and where? According to Negri, the creation of value extends beyond the factory walls to embrace the whole of society; the 'mass worker' of industrialism gives way to the 'socialised worker' (operaio sociale) and the terrain of exploitation now becomes the whole of human life. In postmodernity, the metropolis becomes the privileged arena of value extraction. We must therefore understand the global city, with its stratifications, its enclosures and its resistances. Old categories of the private and the public are inadequate to describe the new matrix of production, which is characterised rather by the 'common', the productive space of cognitive and immaterial labour. Today's metropolis can be defined as a space of antagonisms between forms of life produced, on the one hand, by finance capital (the capital that operates around rents), and on the other by the 'cognitive proletariat'. The central question is then how 'the common' of the latter can be mobilised for the destruction of capitalism.In an analysis that runs from the Italian workerism (operaismo) of the 1970s to the present day, From the Factory to the Metropolis offers readers valuable insight into the far-reaching impact of deindustrialisation, presenting both the challenges and opportunities. It will appeal to the many interested in the continuing development of Negri's project and to anyone interested in radical politics today.

Antonio Negri is formerly Professor of State Theory at the University of Padua. Ed Emery is a translator and political activist.

Preface

Part I. Exodus from the factory

1. The reappropriation of public space

2. Midway terrains

3. The multitude and the metropolis: Notes in the form of hypotheses for an inquiry into the precariat in the global cities

4. Exiting from industrial capitalism

5. From the factory to the metropolis

6. Metropolis and multitude: Inquiry notes on precarity in global cities

Part II. Inventing common

7. Banlieue and city: A philosophical overview

Co-written with the late Jean-Marie Vincent

8. Democracy versus rent

9. Presentation of Rem Koolhaas's Junkspace

10. The capital-labour relation in cognitive capitalism

Co-written with Carlo Vercellone

11. Inventing the commons of humanity

Co-written with Judith Revel

12. The Commune of social cooperation: Interview with Federico Tomasello on questions regarding the metropolis

13. The common lung of the metropolis: Interview with Federico Tomasello

14. The habitat of general intellect: A dialogue between Antonio Negri and Federico Tomasello on living in the contemporary metropolis

Part III. First fruits of the new metropolis

15. Reflections on the Manifesto for an Accelerationist Politics

16. Notes on the abstract strike

17. From the factory to the metropolis ... and back again Origin of the Texts

2
Midway Terrains


Notes on the productive beehives of our metropolis, which sometimes look like anthills, or like communities of slaves, or other times like phalansteries, namely communities of people free and joyful

Companies without Factories


Hear ye, hear ye: Alcatel (a major French electronics company) and the Dutch giant Philips have announced that they will be selling all their factories and their direct production activities. They will thus become ‘companies without factories’; so from now on they are referring to themselves as ‘virtual enterprises’. It is obvious that behind these proclamations (and the extensive scientific literature that wraps them up in ideological frills) lies first of all a restructuring of production processes. Obviously the factories will continue to exist, Alcatel’s power stations and Philips’ TV sets will continue to be produced with a lot of sweat, and labour will be exploited in them, possibly even more than before – but management and shareholders will no longer be involved with the dirty stuff. Financial capital is hoping to shift the costs and risks of managing the labour force on to subordinate segments of the production process. And it is getting better and better at it. At the same time the production of sophistry around the so-called ‘abolition’ of work is growing, so that, confronted with the ‘relocation’ of production from the central enterprises (which are now transformed into finance companies), these companies are not ashamed to say that ‘production has been taken out of the world of labour’ and that ‘the post-Fordist company is a completely virtual company’. However, when we consider even the most bizarre descriptions of this new stage of production, we must admit that they are not solely demented. In post-Fordist production, the company without factories does not content itself with relocating production, assigning sections of it to subordinate productive units, and ‘outsourcing’ both material and immaterial services. In addition to these and similar things, it is able to benefit from the renewal of the general conditions of the reproduction of society, whereby production and living in society have become elements of the same whole; and the resulting social productivity (generalised and without factories) is captured [captata] by the company. It is now as meaningless as it is pointlessly captious to ask whether the additional value that accrues to ‘companies without factories’ comes in fact from the relocation of factories or directly and without mediation from societal productivity. And, while it is true that the life of a number of institutions (of old-style capitalism and of socialist trade unionism, not to mention other corporations) may depend on the answer to this question, the fact remains that the answer is of little interest to the millions of workers who labour day and night in small factories and workplaces, between basements and living rooms, in large leftover factories and warehouses for the centralisation of intangible services, and in universities and private laboratories. The societal productivity of labour is formed in fact in a kind of metropolitan beehive, in which are counterposed or combined old sites of production and new activities that have no specific place. An extreme mobility of labour is now matched by a circulation of production space that does not lag far behind, through a meaningless urban scenario whereby now an excedence of productivity constitutes itself – a productivity beyond measure, which knots itself together productively but at the same time represents itself in a monstrous way: these are not sailors’ knots, but Gordian knots that no sword can cut… Beehives, transversality, very high productivity.

What Do We Mean by ‘Capturing Social Value’?


Moving around in these beehives you run the risk of a headache. We find ourselves needing to get our bearings in a very large-scale transformation, where ‘companies without factories’ and ‘profit without labour’ appear to have become a possibility. But we know – not through elaborate science but simply from common sense – that there is no value without labour and no surplus value without exploitation of labour. Hence we have to ask: What do we mean by ‘capturing social value’? How do we identify that exploitation that runs through society and gives meaning to the fact of capturing value in the beehive (or rather in those parts of the postmodern productive beehive in which factories really do no longer exist)? Social value? In what sector of society, in which of its places or functions, under what conditions (once we eliminate the factory) will it succeed in capturing value? It is interesting to note that virtually the whole of the industrial economy is now asking these questions. The key issue is the valuation of the company’s social capital. This social capital consists in turn of social capital proper (i.e., the productive interrelations and social relations) and of intellectual capital (i.e., the ensemble of know-how and independent knowledge, patents and research, communitarian being together and inventive mobility) that live in the enterprise – or rather live in the enterprise as a potential for gathering the value that is produced in society, both through social intelligences and through social cooperation. The ‘company without factories’ is like a windmill: its blades are driven by the power of social production… Thus it does not produce anything, but rather collects the production that is done elsewhere, the energy that comes from society, from outside the enterprise. The capitalists thus see exploited workers as windmills: however, value derives from the workers, not from the windmills. Now, social production, on the other hand, is a real stream of value. If we look at it as it flows into the metropolitan beehive from which I started my critical reading of the entrepreneurial capture [captazione] of social value, we shall see how different forms of extraction of value accumulate from the exploitation of workers; and at the same time we shall see how new forms of exploitation get established, almost a new primitive accumulation, in the area of computers and in the application of their qualities to the world of work. The enterprise, or rather the totality of enterprises, thus extends its command over the swarm of activities that produce value in the new digital accumulation – people who exploit themselves, thinking (rightly) that they are being creative; people who bring together workers and activities, thinking (rightly) that they are making themselves free by producing communities; people who discover new productive powers in the times they live and in attention to each moment of social communication … and a thousand other experiences! Businessmen like to call these things human capital and relational capital; but in fact this is a reversal of reality! Because we are dealing here with human labour and relational labour: labour, not capital. Then the enterprise grasps it, squeezes it tight in its logic, subsumes labour and exploitation, and calls them capital. Political control and juridical control become exclusive here. They replace social reality, its conflicts, and the productive power that flows from them.

Where Is the Measure?


It is obvious that we are dealing with exploitation: there is no creation of added value that does not involve in some way extracting from workers more than what they are paid for. But, although intellectual and, more generally, immaterial and social labour is subject to this rule (and of this there is no doubt), nevertheless in these cases the old rule no longer exists that justifies capitalist exploitation or at least gives it a semblance of reasonableness: the capitalist provision of means of production, of tools for work, and of the organisation of cooperation. None of this is in place any longer (which means that capitalism’s painful mystification and proud justification of exploitation are gone, too): the exploitation of the intellectual (immaterial) social labour is, purely and simply, arbitrary. Capital does not provide and does not risk anything in this matter. It simply steals. It organises, through company structures [le strutture d’impresa], both individual and collective, dispositifs of expropriation and outright theft, or piracy, or robbery, or – increasingly – slavery and war… There is no longer any justification for exploitation. The new proletarians are tossed from one place to the next in the beehive of production, when they are not excluded and dumped to the edge, like idiots. They know this; and they show it by building waves of resistance, one after the other, in a cyclicity of behaviours that cannot but create the event – sooner or later. But it is even more interesting to note that this irrationality and senselessness of the postmodern situation of labour, the precariousness of capitalist ownership, and that fierce fragility of exploitation are also part and parcel of the self-awareness of capital – of its functionaries, in other words of the entrepreneurs. They no longer know what they are earning or why they are earning it. They have no criteria for measurement … And it is not as if they had not tried to find them: here too we find ourselves faced with endless and insubstantial...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 16.1.2018
Übersetzer Ed Emery
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Allgemeines / Lexika
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung Politische Theorie
Wirtschaft Allgemeines / Lexika
Wirtschaft Volkswirtschaftslehre
Schlagworte capitalism, post-industrial, deindustrialisation • Gesellschaftstheorie • Philosophie • Philosophy • Political & Economic Philosophy • Political Philosophy & Theory • Political Science • Politikwissenschaft • Politische Philosophie • Politische Philosophie u. Politiktheorie • Politische u. Ökonomische Philosophie • Social Theory • Sociology • Soziologie
ISBN-10 1-5095-0349-8 / 1509503498
ISBN-13 978-1-5095-0349-0 / 9781509503490
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